{"id":3841,"date":"1956-07-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1956-07-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1956-vol-37-no-7-on-writing-briefly\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:24:24","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:24:24","slug":"july-1956-vol-37-no-7-on-writing-briefly","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1956-vol-37-no-7-on-writing-briefly\/","title":{"rendered":"July 1956 &#8211; Vol. 37, No. 7 &#8211; On Writing Briefly"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p>One important step toward clear and courteous writing is                     described by Polonius in Shakespeare&#8217;s <em>Hamlet<\/em>: &#8220;since                     brevity is the soul of wit, and tediousness the limbs and                     outward flourishes, I will be brief.&#8221; But what is brevity?<\/p>\n<p>If a piece of writing tells the whole story, and only that,                     it is not too long. Being brief means that you will not use                     ten pages to tell a one-page story: but neither will                     you try to tell a ten-page story on one side of a sheet                     of paper.<\/p>\n<p>A report of three thousand words may be brief, and a 100-word                     memo may be long: the first, if it comprehends many facts,                     several points of view, and some choices: the latter if it                     is devoid of necessary facts, woolly in its thinking, and                     indeterminate in its conclusion.<\/p>\n<p>To use too many words to communicate one&#8217;s thoughts is a                     sign of mediocrity, while to gather much thought into few                     words, clearly and accurately, stamps the person of executive                     genius.<\/p>\n<p>Men in management positions have a special obligation. Sour                     notes are not sweetened because the writer dictated them from                     an executive&#8217;s chair to an exquisite secretary.<\/p>\n<p>What you have written may not be bad writing, but the chances                     are it is not the most effective plain talk either.<\/p>\n<p>Have you written it too hastily? When you spend an hour                     seeking the answer to a correspondent&#8217;s question or complaint,                     isn&#8217;t it good economy to spend ten minutes expressing your                     answer so that it will be understood and appreciated?<\/p>\n<p>When Churchill was directing Britain&#8217;s war effort he wrote                     a memo containing this dictum: It is sheer laziness not compressing                     thought into a reasonable space.<\/p>\n<h3>Why are you writing?<\/h3>\n<p>Before starting to write, you should know just what you                     wish to convey. Business men don&#8217;t ordinarily write with the                     sole purpose of self-expression. They want to get other                     people to understand, to believe, to act.<\/p>\n<p>A letter may fail of its purpose because of lack of target                     definition. The writer scatters his fire. He writes or dictates                     many words while wandering around in his mind looking for                     explicit thoughts. So one rule for the writer of letters is:                     reach a clear and definite agreement with yourself about the                     ideas you wish to convey.<\/p>\n<p>You are not writing to be impressive, but to be understood.                     There is an obligation upon you to deliver your message in                     such a way that it will have the best possible chance to fulfil                     its mission. John Ball and Cecil B. Williams illustrate this                     in their book called <em>Report Writing <\/em>(Ronald&#8217;s Press                     Co., New York, 1955): &#8220;The quarterback has to throw the ball                     where the receiver is, or the pass is not good. The quarterback                     can&#8217;t catch the ball for the end, of course, or make him catch                     it &#8211; but he can put it in the end&#8217;s hands. After that it is                     up to the end.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The thing needed in writing is to have something to pass                     along, and to use words the reader will understand, put up                     in packages small enough for him to grasp easily.<\/p>\n<h3>Be precise<\/h3>\n<p>This is not a list of rules for letter writing, but no essay                     can avoid reference to some rules. One necessary prescription                     is: be precise.<\/p>\n<p>When your writing is definite in its manner and plain in                     its language it is likely to be vivid, so that your words                     walk up and down in the mind of your reader. Brevity helps                     you to give movement to what you write.<\/p>\n<p>The first virtue of a masculine writing style is brevity,                     and brevity is aided by use of the active verb and the concrete                     noun. What most appeals to people is life, action, sights                     and sounds &#8211; something happening. Note how carefully those                     exquisite short stories called the parables speak only of                     things you can touch and see, and what befalls them.<\/p>\n<p>Your writing will be diffuse and pedestrian so long as you                     prefer abstract words to concrete words. But most business                     men are not that way at all by nature, so another rule is:                     be yourself. Directness and simplicity of expression will                     contribute mightily toward natural forcefulness. &#8220;One must                     still have chaos in one, to give birth to a dancing star,&#8221;                     said Nietzsche, the German philosopher. The business man will                     resolve his chaotic thoughts into exact, concrete and brief                     expression.<\/p>\n<h3>Be graceful<\/h3>\n<p>Brevity is not to be worshipped in a narrow way. The graces                     have their place in social correspondence and descriptive                     narration. Some irrelevancies should make their way into all                     letters designed to win friends. Brevity should be sought                     in the spirit of &#8220;as briefly as I can, saying what I wish                     to say, in the spirit I wish to convey,&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Let our letters have something in them not common and ordinary.                     Every letter is entitled to depart from what is dictated by                     a strict rule of shortness: a departure that adds a personal                     touch in keeping with the purpose and content of the letter.<\/p>\n<p>Your letters can be meaningful and significant and still                     be melodious and human and courteous. But it takes art and                     effort to do all this without rambling.<\/p>\n<p>What is our ideal? All of us would like to write letters                     and reports and articles that have distinction of expression,                     brevity, dramatic quality, concreteness, beauty of rhythm                     and adventurousness of phrase and idea. We can do it. By paying                     attention and observing a few principles we can improve our                     writing little by little until one day we awake to the realization                     that we have achieved the mystery called &#8220;art&#8221;.<\/p>\n<h3>Be clear<\/h3>\n<p>Opposed to the grace and concreteness we have been writing                     about is what Professor Edgar Dale of Ohio State University                     brightly headlines on two of his essays: &#8220;The Art of Confusion&#8221;                     and &#8220;Clear Only if Known.&#8221; It is unwise to send forth your                     thoughts like so much raw material for your reader to put                     into shape. The expert writer, the thoughtful writer, the                     writer who wishes his letter to accomplish something, will                     not leave to his reader the labour of disentangling the pertinent                     material and reshaping it in his own mind.<\/p>\n<p>What is the first object of a machine? Effective work. The                     maker seeks to eliminate friction and tightness and looseness.                     The machine that runs with perfect smoothness transmits its                     power in production.<\/p>\n<p>What is the first object of writing? To convey thoughts.                     The writer seeks to arrange words so that they shall suffer                     the least possible obstruction from friction in the reader&#8217;s                     mind.<\/p>\n<p>In both cases the object is to secure the maximum of disposable                     force by diminishing the amount absorbed in transmission.                     &#8220;Obviously,&#8221; said George Henry Lewes in an essay on style                     more than fifty years ago, &#8220;if a reader is engaged in extricating                     the meaning from a sentence which ought to have reflected                     its meaning as in a mirror, the mental energy thus employed                     is abstracted from the amount of force which he has to bestow                     on the subject.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>If your letter deals with products or ideas that are highly                     technical, take pains to interpret them simply. Remember that                     you are the specialist on the point you are writing about:                     your correspondent expects something helpful from you.<\/p>\n<p>This does not mean that you must always write for the 12-year-old                     mentality. Do avoid ten-dollar words and do build bridges                     between one section of a topic and another. When &#8220;boiling                     down&#8221; your letter, be sure not to demolish the bridges, thus                     leaving the reader to flounder between two thoughts. Destroy                     confusing ornamentation; trim away the superfluous; remove                     images and expressions that are foreign to your train of thought                     and your purpose.<\/p>\n<p>John Evelyn, the 17th century diary writer, told the story                     of Monmouth&#8217;s rebellion in 68 lines, and he included all essentials                     and colour. Homer condensed ten years of adventure into his                     epic Odyssey, and Aristotle made a digest of it in 79 words.                     Lincoln&#8217;s address at Gettysburg used only 266 words. The Ten                     Commandments use 297. The United States Declaration of Independence                     has 300. By contrast, said Walter Winchell, the United States                     columnist, a U.S.A. order to reduce the price of cabbage uses                     26,911 words.<\/p>\n<h3>Effects of lengthiness<\/h3>\n<p>People do not like to read a letter that is lazily long.                     They are likely to exclaim at the end, as an old philosopher                     did in a great Egyptian temple built for a little black monkey:                     &#8220;What a magnificent palace is here for such a ridiculous inhabitant!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is not good business to have that said of something one                     writes. Readers are likely to resent it if you take up their                     time by using superfluous words. Your purpose &#8211; selling goods,                     collecting money, answering criticism, or making friends &#8211;                     will be better served by letters that are concise, dynamic,                     straight-to-the-point, and tell exactly what                     your reader wants to know.<\/p>\n<p>Lengthiness can be expensive as well as ineffective. Suppose                     you write a memo to 1,000 people, perhaps your employees or                     agents. It takes you an hour to block out the memo: it takes                     your readers an average of five minutes to read and understand                     it. On the other hand, suppose you were to spend two hours                     in composing the memo or letter, writing it so simply and                     briefly that your readers can absorb it in only four minutes.                     You would spend 60 extra minutes and your readers would save                     1,000 minutes: a good return in time, temper and friendly                     feeling.<\/p>\n<h3>Simplicity pays<\/h3>\n<p>Great writers try to tell their thoughts as clearly and                     shortly as possible. Simplicity has always been a mark of                     truth, and we believe that it is now accepted as a mark of                     genius.<\/p>\n<p>Simplicity is the outward sign of depth of thought. You                     cannot adorn simplicity. You do not achieve it by grammatical                     artifice. What will move your reader to your way of thinking                     is your sincerity manifesting itself through words that have                     human feeling akin to his own, and carry a meaning of interest                     to him.<\/p>\n<p>Alas! there are many people who think that if they are dull                     enough and laboured enough they will sound scholarly. They                     take an ordinary proverb, like &#8220;Early to bed and early to                     rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise,&#8221; and they change                     it to &#8220;Early retirement is a significant factor in one&#8217;s physical                     development, pecuniary success and intellectual stature.&#8221;                     They take an advertising slogan like &#8220;Ask the man who owns                     one&#8221; and turn it into &#8220;Make an inquiry of one of our purchasers.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Good style is not reached by such tortuous ways. Confused                     talk does not drum up business. Ornamentation wearies the                     eye and deadens the mind. The smooth and luscious in a business                     communication disgusts us. Every word that can be spared from                     the purpose and plan of the letter is hurtful if it remains.<\/p>\n<p>Superlatives should be avoided. They are unnecessary and                     often misleading, deceiving not only the reader but the writer.                     The latter may be led to think when he writes &#8220;I have given                     the matter my closest attention&#8221; that he really has exhausted                     all avenues of approach.<\/p>\n<p>Exaggeration expresses ignorance. We try to replace poverty                     of thought or language by the use of bombastic phrases. Our                     appeal will be more effective if we write gently, supplying                     facts in easily understood form, presenting our purpose in                     a charming and eager way.<\/p>\n<p>We must be careful about adjectives, because the evil destiny                     of many who aspire to good writing abides in their indiscriminate                     use. Those who misuse or over-use adjectives fill their                     letters with affectation. They are like the painter who threw                     sponges soaked with several colours at a wall, expecting a                     beautiful landscape to result.<\/p>\n<p>It is good practice to reserve adjectives for occasions                     when they make our meaning more precise, and to reject them                     when they merely convey emphasis. Concrete nouns, fittingly                     chosen, and active verbs, will usually give the desired strength                     and movement to what we write.<\/p>\n<h3>Words and sentences<\/h3>\n<p>What do you write with? Words, sentences, and paragraphs.                     We should take a delight in calling forth the right words,                     in the right environment, to say what is in our minds to say.<\/p>\n<p>The best words call up images with little expenditure of                     the reader&#8217;s time and energy. It is a mistake for the business                     man to chase after a fine word instead of using the simple                     word that fits his needs. He lays himself open to two dangers:                     he may be seduced by the charm of some attractive word to                     write something he did not intend, or he may be tempted to                     seek a situation into which he may fit the word to which he                     has taken a liking.<\/p>\n<p>It is obvious by now that brevity in letters does not consist                     alone in deleting words as one does in composing a telegram,                     but in choosing the right words to convey our meaning clearly                     and sharply. By using words that give light and shadow to                     our meaning we help ourselves toward writing pithily. If there                     are unusual words that express a meaning better than any others,                     we should use them. We should not fear long words if they                     are strongly expressive and have a familiar look and sound.<\/p>\n<p>Let us cut sentences into bites we can swallow. The man                     who wishes to avoid suspicion of being a fuzzy thinker will                     prune his high-sounding phrases. Instead of adorning                     one thought about his firm or his product or himself in ten                     glorious sentences, he will fill ten simple sentences with                     ten significant thoughts.<\/p>\n<p>The average length of sentences in five of the most popular                     magazines is 18 words. If you write long sentences, look for                     joints in their construction where you can break them into                     smaller pieces. You will be pleasantly surprised, if you examine                     yesterday&#8217;s carbon copies, to see how simple it is. Look at                     all those &#8220;and&#8221; sentences that can be broken up. We seem to                     have a feeling of guilt when we write a short, simple sentence.                     Then we tack on &#8220;and&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. something or other.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The more words there are in a sentence the harder it is                     to read and understand that sentence. A sentence should, ideally,                     express only one thought. At the same time, we must try to                     have some melodious movement in what we write: we cannot have                     our sentences always leaping and never flowing. Too many very                     short sentences tire us. We should vary the pattern. Each                     sentence should tell a situation which is part of a larger                     one, and move us on to the next.<\/p>\n<p>Building our sentences into good paragraphs is an art not                     to be despised. We shall not go far wrong if we take for each                     paragraph one essential truth about our subject, or one point                     of view. By breaking our letters into short lengths in a thoughtful                     way we achieve two desirable results: we give our letters                     an airy and readable look, and we increase our points of emphasis.<\/p>\n<h3>Writing a letter<\/h3>\n<p>Your letter will be well written if it fulfils these modest                     requirements: if it is effortless in appearance, showing no                     sign of strain in its composition; if it is untheatrical,                     making its points without needlessly sawing the air; if it                     is simple in its construction, making intelligible to the                     reader things that might be obscure; if its words fit your                     thoughts, not hanging like a giant&#8217;s clothes on the limbs                     of a dwarf nor squeezing a man&#8217;s frame into the clothes of                     a boy; and if all this is attained in the smallest space commensurate                     with the clear expression of what you have to say.<\/p>\n<p>Think before writing. Just as perspective is the bridle                     and rudder of the artist, so a forward look is the guide of                     the writer. You should know your audience and your subject;                     you should have a clear conception of what you want your audience                     to learn about your subject.<\/p>\n<p>If you do a little exercise in analysis it will help you                     to write briefly. Ask yourself: to whom am I writing? what                     knowledge has he about this matter, knowledge that I need                     not repeat? what is his feeling about it? on what points do                     we agree? disagree? what do I wish to add to his knowledge?                     what do I wish to influence him to do?<\/p>\n<p>Begin your letter at the point of the reader&#8217;s interest.                     It is discourteous to tackle the reader as if he must read                     what you write, and need not be wooed. No one is so wise or                     important that he can neglect being urbane.<\/p>\n<p>In the body of your letter, make of the problem or plan                     an interesting situation to be told about. What is happening                     about that order, payment, delivery? what difference does                     it make to your correspondent? You must have something specific                     to say or you would not be writing: don&#8217;t be coy about saying                     it. Keep this part of your letter compact, being sure, at                     the same time to cover the subject.<\/p>\n<p>Be correct. Brevity is helped by exactness. There are times                     for severity of writing, with no frills or puffs, but even                     then &#8212; perhaps, indeed, more then than at other                     times- you need to be exact in your use of words.<\/p>\n<h3>Look it over<\/h3>\n<p>If you have been led to believe that your correspondence,                     or that of your subordinates, can be improved, beware of seeking                     neat solutions. We do not know of any way of handling correspondence                     that is at the same time the quickest way and the best way.                     Efficiency in results demands some expenditure of time in                     preparation.<\/p>\n<p>When you are checking a letter, read it with more than the                     discovery of typographical errors in mind. Does it convey                     your message to your reader in such a way as to provoke a                     favourable response along lines you desire? Does it tell as                     briefly as is consistent with courtesy and your strategy just                     what you have to say? Have you smothered any important points                     by loading them with detail? Have you discarded all unnecessary                     ballast? Is there anything in the letter whose presence or                     absence makes no discernible difference?<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare seems to have had a habit of roughing out his                     plays pretty large, and then cutting them down. He wrote at                     white heat, once the mood was on him. He did not pause at                     the end of every passage, to check back on the number of words                     he was using. But in the outcome his plays hew closely to                     the line of economy, considering not only the matter in them                     but the evocation of spirit they were designed to arouse.<\/p>\n<p>Yours may be a similar method: to write at length and then                     shorten your manuscript.<\/p>\n<p>Read your letter, too, with an eye to its effect on you.                     The discipline of striving for perfection of expression, your                     effort to do a good job with an economy of words, will have                     a beneficial effect. A sloppy way of writing may give rise                     to self-induced murkiness of thought, but strictness                     in expression will contribute to a tidy mind.<\/p>\n<h3>Appreciate good writing<\/h3>\n<p>We should esteem good writing, and show our appreciation.                     There is magic in a word of praise.<\/p>\n<p>Why not write, once in a while, to someone who writes you                     a letter, just to compliment him? Go into particulars; don&#8217;t                     compliment generally. He probably knows that what he wrote                     was pretty good technically. Instead, tell him what it meant                     to you, how it gave you a new view-point, solved a problem,                     or added to your happiness. As Andr\u00e9 Maurois once remarked:                     &#8220;The general did not thank me when I talked to him of his                     victories, but his gratitude was unbounded when a lady mentioned                     the twinkle in his eye.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Out of your evaluation of others&#8217; letters will spring a                     new desire for distinction in your own.<\/p>\n<p>It will be easy, then, to choose which comment shall apply                     to what you write: Maria&#8217;s in <em>Love&#8217;s Labour&#8217;s Lost <\/em>&#8211;                     &#8220;The letter is too long by half a mile&#8221;, or Sam Weller&#8217;s in                     <em>Pickwick Papers <\/em>&#8211; &#8220;She&#8217;ll vish there wos more, and                     that&#8217;s the great art o&#8217; letter writin&#8217;.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[36],"class_list":["post-3841","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-36"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>July 1956 - Vol. 37, No. 7 - On Writing Briefly - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1956-vol-37-no-7-on-writing-briefly\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"July 1956 - Vol. 37, No. 7 - On Writing Briefly - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"One important step toward clear and courteous writing is described by Polonius in Shakespeare&#8217;s Hamlet: &#8220;since brevity is the soul of wit, and tediousness the limbs and outward flourishes, I will be brief.&#8221; But what is brevity? 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